This recipe booklet from Hershey Chocolate Syrup has no date marked but I believe this was published in the 1930s or earlier and is part of my personal collection. Each of the pages from this vintage cookbook are filed in the 55 Recipes For Hershey’s Syrup Category. You can read the page typed below or click on the picture to view a larger scanned copy.

Cook the sugar and salt with 3 tablespoonfuls of water to a light caramel brown, add Hershey’s Syrup, then the butter and cornstarch mixed to a paste, the boiling water and the vanilla. Cook over boiling water till thick. Serve with cottage pudding or any hot dessert. This sauce is very nice with ice cream.

Hot Chocolate Nut Sauce

Heat Hershey’s Syrup–2 tablespoons for one serving. Break in nut-meats and pour over ice cream or cake.

Cream the butter well, adding Hershey’s Syrup gradually. When well blended, begin stirring in the sugar, working in a sufficient quantity to make of the desired consistency. Add the salt and flavor with vanilla. Set in a cool place till served.

Chocolate Whipped Cream

1 cupful heavy cream . . . 2 tablespoonfuls HERSHEY’S Syrup.

Chill the cream thoroughly and whip with a rotary egg beater until stiff enough to stand alone. Then gradually fold in Hershey’s Syrup. Use as a sauce on sponge cake or any light, delicate dessert. No sugar is required, as Hershey’s Syrup will sweeten the cream sufficiently.

Chocolate Marshmallow Nut Sauce

Stir 2 tablespoons Hershey’s Syrup with 1 tablespoon marshmallow cream, 1/4 teaspoon vanilla, and so many fresh pecan meats that you must spoon it onto the little cakes in a plate.

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You're welcome to take a peek at my collection of vintage recipes & household notes, please print off whatever you like for your own recipe box.

You'll find charming handwritten recipes, old clippings, vintage recipe booklets & promo pieces. They may be a bit tattered, yellowed with age and sometimes stained, but these recipes were saved, used & cherished for decades...and now they've settled here and shared with you!

A Look Back: Use for an old radio, now that TV is here to stay. Remove the "innards" of the old console radio cabinet, add shelves, slick it up with fresh paint, and presto, a bookcase or writing desk stands before you. Source: 2,001 Household Hints and Dollar Stretchers (1957)

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